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 PROGRESS OF EVENTS IN CANADA. 
 
 VUOM THE 
 
 
 'LONDON AND WESTMINSTER REVIEW 
 
 For January, 1837. 
 
(2 ) 
 
 PROGRESS OF EVENTS IN CANADA. 
 
 IN the second nuir.ber of the ♦ London Review,' published in 
 July, 1835, we laid before our readers a very Till exposition 
 of the misgovernment which has so long prevailed in the Canadas, 
 and of the discontent which has been generated thereby. 
 
 After enumerating the manifold evus and abuses which have 
 sprung out of the system of colonial government, established by 
 what is called the Quebec Constitutional Act (31 Geo. III., c. 31 — 
 1791), our article concladed with the following summary of the 
 reforms demanded by the Assembly of Lower Canada : — 
 
 ' In this situation of affairs. Lord Gosford and two Commission- 
 ers are about to proceed to Canada, to inquire into the grievances 
 of the Canadian people, and report thereupon. What is likely 
 to be the result of this inquiry ? 
 
 ' Our answer is, that let the commission make what report it 
 pleases, one only result can follow ; and that is, the demands of 
 the House of Assembly m%ist be acceded to. 
 
 ' 1. An Elective Counci' must be granted to the people, and the 
 present Legislative Council abolished. 
 
 '2. The whole of the revenue mustb*^ placed entirely under the 
 control of the people of Canada. 
 
 * 3. The Judges must be made responsible to the Provincial 
 Legislature, and not to the King.' 
 
 The Commissioners above spoken of reached Canada in the 
 autumn of the same year, 1835, and in the ensuing winter Sir 
 John Colborne, the Governor of Upper Canada, who had rendered 
 himself extremely obnoxious to the people of that province, was 
 recalled, and his place was supplied by Sir Francis Head. 
 
 The object of this article is to detail the principal proceedings 
 of these personages ; and we think we shall show that they have 
 not merely failed to allay, but that, aided by the disingenuous — 
 we had almost said treacherous — instructions with which they 
 were furnished by Lord Glenelg, they have materially augmented 
 the discontents which existed at the time of their arrival. 
 
 Previous to the departure of Lord Gosford and his follow Com- 
 missioners*, Mr. Roebuck, in his capacity of agent to the House 
 of Assembly, laid before the colonial minister. Lord Glenelg, a 
 full and explicit statement, in writing, of the views and demands 
 of that House. 
 
 • The Commissioners were, Lord Gosford, Sir Charles Grey, and Sir George Gipps. 
 Lord Gosford was also appointed Governer-in-Chief, in the place of Lord Aylmer, a 
 Governor so bad, that any change must have been fur the bettvr. 
 
PROG.RKSS OF KVENTS IN CANADA. 
 
 3 
 
 This document, which has since been printed both in the 
 colony and in this country *, is in every respect a most able state 
 paper. The reforms demanded by the Assembly, especially the 
 abolition of the present Legislative Council, and the substitution 
 of an elective second chamber, are there insisted upon with great 
 weight of argument, and Lord Glenelg is warned of the serious 
 consequences which may result from refusing them. 
 
 The hope was at first entertained, and we may say en?ouraged, 
 that the Commissioners had carried out powers to concede these 
 reforms. Sir George Grey, it is true, excused himself from laying 
 the instructions before Parliament, on the ground of respect to 
 the Canadians, as such instructions should be first laid before the 
 Assembly. That done, he promised they should be presented to 
 the House. 
 
 When the Commissioners reached Canada, their talk was 
 everywhere, and at all times, liberal in the extreme. Lord Gos- 
 ford spoke of himself and his colleagues as the nominees of a 
 reforming ministry, appointed for no other purpose than to carry 
 out reforms. Of himself, individually, he spoke only as the 
 friend cf O'Connell, His previous conduct in Armagh had 
 tended to produce an impression in his favour. His instructions 
 he seldom alluded to without expressly asserting their liberality. 
 * I am convinced,' said his Lordship, in conversation with a lead- 
 ing member of the Assembly, a few days before the commence- 
 ment of the session, * I am convinced that my instructions will 
 satisfy you when they are known. The day after to-morrow will 
 be the great day of revelations ; the whole country will then know 
 as much as I know of the intentions of his Majesty. I shall 
 speak all I know without reserve.' In consequence of this fair 
 speaking, previous to the commencement of the session. Lord 
 Gosford gained the good-will, if not the perfect confidence, of the 
 members of the Assembly, and indeed of the mass of the people. 
 He gained, also, the bitter hatred of the colonial Tories, whose 
 journals abused him in terms of the utmost virulence, proving that 
 they too had been deceived by his professions. 
 
 At length came the promised ' day of revelations ;' but nothing 
 of the kind expected from the Governor's professions was revealed. 
 There was a speech from the throne; witbo it it, the beautiful 
 copy of the British Constitution which prevails in Canada would 
 not have met with due observance. It was, however, wholly un- 
 satisfactory to the Canadians. It was silent on all the topics they 
 deemed most important. If Lord Gosford did ' speak all ha 
 
 * See Mr. Roebuck's pamphlet, entitled ' Existing Difficulties in the Gjvern- 
 mciit of the Caiiachis' (beiuf; a repvint of tlie atiic.le which appeared in this Review, 
 with additions). The ducuiucnt alluded to ia to bo found in the Appendix of the 
 pamphlet. 
 
 B 2 
 
PROGRESS OF EVENTS IN CANADA. 
 
 ■ 
 
 knew,' it was clear he knew nothing. He said nothing of a 
 change in the constitution of the Council. He said nothing of 
 giving up the revenue to tha Assembly — reforms which were the 
 head and front of the popular demands. The consequence was, 
 that the degree of hope — we cannot call it confidence — to which 
 Lord Gosford's professions had given birth, was well nigh de- 
 stroyed. 
 
 Still the good-will of the Members of Assembly towards the 
 Governor was not as yet impaired. The Commission, the As- 
 sembly did not, in fact, could not, recognize ; but, as Governor, 
 Lord Gosford was treated with all possible respect. 
 
 The instructions being thus, notwithstanding the promise of 
 Sir George Grey and the statements of Lord Gosford, withheld 
 from the Colonial Legislature, it became the duty of Mr. Roebuck 
 again to ask for them in his place in the House of Commons. 
 This he did on the 16th of February. Sir George Grey, after 
 acknowledging that ' the House of Assembly had shown they 
 were actuated by the most honest and ardent wish to promote the 
 interests of the colony,' urged upon Mr. Roebuck's consideration 
 that, 'inasmuch as there was now a fair prospect of adjusting 
 the differences between this country and Canada, he thought that, 
 while negotiations were still pending, it would be extremely 
 injudicious, and might lead to great inconvenience if the instruc- 
 tions given to the Commissioners were to be made publi'^.' Here- 
 upon Mr. Roebuck, being * determined to let the ministry have a 
 complete trial on this matter,' consented to withdraw his motion. 
 At the very moment that Sir George Grey was thus expatiating 
 on the 'great inconvenience,' the 'extreme injudiciousness' of 
 permitting the instructions to be made public, they were in every 
 one's hands in Canada, by means of a diplomatic blunder of Sir 
 Francis Head. 
 
 The Legislature of Upper Canada was in session when Sir 
 Francis reached the province in February, Accompanying his 
 first message were extracts, giving nearly all the material part of 
 the instructions to the Commissioners. It appeared that he had 
 been permitted to communicate the substance of the Commis- 
 sioners instructions with his own ; but not having been long 
 enough in the official ranks to have learned that substance in 
 diplomatic language means shahir, he committed the irreme- 
 diable blunder which we have described. 
 
 The dislike of Sir George Grey that the instructions shoidd see 
 the light, and his conviction that their publication would produce 
 ' grt^at inconvenience,' would be ' extremely injudicious,' were now 
 fully explained on the face of the instructions themselves. In 
 substance they amoiuited to a refusal of the demands of the As- 
 sembly, whilst there was some slight shadow of liberality in their 
 
 y 
 
■ 
 
 PROGRESS OF EVTJNTS IN CANADA. 5 
 
 tone. Lord Gosford had confined himself to the latter; Sir 
 Francis Head, as we have seen, blundered in the former. 
 
 The object of the Colonial Minister and the Governor in attempt- 
 ikig to deceive the Assembly and people of Lower Canada, by 
 dealing in fairer words than their real intentions justified, is ob- 
 vious enough. The Assembly had refused supplies for some 
 years, in order to enforce the reforms for which they contended, 
 and it was thought that if the suspicions of the Assembly could 
 be lulled, the Execiitive might possibly obtain a vote of money, 
 perhaps even a permanent civil list, which would render the offi- 
 cial party independent of the Assembly for an indefinite period. 
 In this hope, however, they were deceived. 
 
 After the disclosure of the instructions, which dashed all the 
 hopes previously entertained, the House of Assembly determined 
 to refuse peremptorily all arrears. In order, however, to meet 
 the Executive in a spirit of conciliation, and to show how unwilling 
 they were to throw any unnecessary impediment in the way of the 
 Governor, the Assembly voted a six months' supply, with the con- 
 ditions they had previously insisted on. The principal condition 
 was, that individuals holding more than one office should only 
 draw the salary of one, namely, the most highly paid. This 
 bill, however, not being palatable to the official party, was lost in 
 that party's house — the Legislative Council. 
 
 This body, so ridiculously defended as the representative of the 
 aristocratic principle, when it represents nothing but a few over- 
 bearing bureaucrats, now vented its rage by a wholesale rejec- 
 tion of the measures of the Assembly. All the Bills which the 
 Assembly passed for the internal improvement of the country 
 were rejected, except one ; and that (a Bill to construct a rail-road 
 between Lower Canada and New Brunswick) was reserved for 
 the royal sanction by the Governor-in-Chief. The Elementary 
 School Bill and other Education Bills were among those rejected 
 by the Council. In consequence of this it became necessary to 
 shut up no less than 1,6G5 schools, established under provincial 
 Acts, thus depriving uo less than 40,000 scholars of the means of 
 iiistriiction. 
 
 ' The party of the Legislative Council,' says Mr. Roebuck, ' are 
 usually \mconimonly pathetic in their lamentations over the ignorance 
 of the Canadian poj)ulation. The true worth cf their hypocritical 
 whining is here made manifest. They talk of ignorance, and deprecate 
 it, so long as such talk forwards, or seems to forward, their paltry 
 purposes. They willingly do all they can to foster and continue 
 Ignorance, the moment that by so doing the same vile ends may be 
 served.' — Existing Difficulties, p. 39. 
 
 The rix Months' Supply Bill (a measure worthy of occasional 
 imitation in the Imperial Parliament) was carried or. the 23d of 
 
f» rwoonKss ov events in tana da. 
 
 robruary. ngainst a counter-proposal to vote arrears. When this 
 Tt>sult was nnulo known, murmurs of applause were heard in the 
 srallorv r.nil helow the bar of the House, which were with diffl- 
 iiihy Vhtvkotl. The people could not restrain their feelings. 
 
 Vnm\ this time to the close of the session, the House was 
 chiotly occupied in receiving reports from the standing committee 
 on grievances ^^chiefly on the conduct of delinquent public-ofticers), 
 in discussing a Bill for the reform of the Legislative Coimcil, and 
 lastly, in carrying an address to the King, and both Houses of 
 Parliament, reiteratuig their grievances, and remonstrating against 
 the conduct we have just detailed. 
 
 The otlicial personages whose conduct was inquired into and 
 condemned by a committee of the Assembly, and subseqtiently by 
 the whole House, were Judges Gale, Thompson, and Fletcher; 
 Sheritl's Gugy and Witchcr, INIr. Felton, Commissioner of Crown 
 Lands, and some others. 
 
 Judge Gale was appointed by Lord Aylmer for no other reason, 
 it should seem, than that he was hateful to the popular party. Ho 
 had been objected to on the groxnid of his having been a violent 
 partisan of the obnoxious Lord Dalhousie, and the declared 
 enemv of those laws which he was called to administer. The 
 objection was abtmdantly sustained, and was pronounced to be 
 valid by Mr. Spring Rice, who, when Colonial Minister, dis- 
 allowed the appointment. Lord Aylmer disregarded Mr. Rice's 
 instructions, and continued the man in his ottice, where, to the dis- 
 honour of our colonial administration, he still remains. 
 
 Malversatiijus in office have been brought home to Judge 
 Fletcher; Judge Thompson has been proved to be an habitual 
 and notorious drunkard ; and yet these persons are s«ill permitted 
 to hold their offices*. 
 
 
 11 
 
 * We cannot avoid citing one case, to give the reader an idea of the kind uf justice 
 which i» dispensed by judges who hold office during the |)leu8ure of the Crown, 
 that is, of the colonial executive: — 
 
 In Decenabtr, 1835, a man perished of cold in the gaol of Montreal. The matter was 
 investigated by the Assembly, and culpable neglect was (iroved against the Sheriff, 
 Gugy, and his officer the jailor. An Address was accordingly voted, praying for 
 their dismissal. This was not complied with ; but the Attorney-General (another 
 during-pleasure official) sent a bill ol indictment for murder against the jailor, to the 
 grand jury. This jury was nominated by Gugy, the sheriti', an implicated party, and 
 uf course the bdl was not found. 
 
 The whole proceding was regarded a'» a mockery of justice, and Lord Gosford's 
 jiopularity was much damaged by it. But the most important part of the case is to 
 come. A newspaper, called ' La Minerve,' called the jury a • packed jury.' The 
 jury took immediate cognizance of the libel, pnsented \t to the Court as such, and 
 the Attorney-(ienur.il moved at once that a writ of attachment sh>)uld issue against 
 the jirintir, Duvernay ; and for what, does the reader imagine ? — for contetupt of 
 Ciiurl! The Court, without hearing evidence even t) the fact of ihe vnbliration, 
 granted the attachment, aim the printer gave bail. The next tirm the deffndant 
 was seived with interrogatories. ' Are you proprietor of '• La Minerve P" ' ' Did you 
 publish the article in (pies'.iua 'f Duvernay, being on his oath, was obliged to uu- 
 
PROGRESS OF EVENTS IN CANADA. 7 
 
 The case of Felton is one of peculiar atrocity. The evidence 
 of his having defrauded the government — that is, the public — of 
 some thousand acres of land, was made so clear, that the delin- 
 quent Commissioner could no longer be screened, and he was 
 suspended from his office. Mr. Spring Rice, however, when 
 Colonial Secretary, admitting the enormity of the offence of 
 which Felton appeared to be guilty, actually directed the Governor 
 to compromise the affair by requiring merely the payment of the 
 value of the lauds of which he had reason to believe the public 
 were defrauded ! Of Fulton's guilt there cannot be much doubt ; 
 but whether guilty or innocent, suspension, except during the pro- 
 secution of an inquiry, must always be injustice. If he be guilty, 
 suspension is no punishment for his crime ; dismissal from office, 
 the refunding of hi>^; ill-gotlen gains, and punishment, should have 
 been at once enforced ; if, however, he be not guilty, suspension 
 becomes an act of gross injustice to the individual. It is, in fact, 
 a lazy expedient worthy only of a British Colonial Minister — an 
 expedient wliich is nearly certain to end in impunity to the delin- 
 quent official, and injustice to t)'e piiblic, and, therefore, productive 
 of disgust and discoulent, to the suffering people of the colony. 
 
 All the above cases, including those of Sheriffs Gugy and 
 Witclier, were such as to call for the immediate interference of 
 the Colonial Office : yet they have been, and we have no doubt 
 will colli inue to be, allowed to drag on until the evils of colonial 
 misrule shall be carried beyond the endurance of the people — a 
 consummation which we take to be rapidly approaching in both 
 provinces. 
 
 The last legislative act of the Assembly was to embody their 
 demand for an elective Legislative Council in the form of a Bill, 
 which passed the House by a very large majority. A preliminary 
 objection to this Bill by the official party was, that it proposed to 
 repeal a portion of an imperial statute, which a provincial and 
 subordinate legislature is not competent to do. But to alter the 
 constitution which the Act created, by a law passed in the forms 
 wliich the Act itself prescribes, is neither a repeal nor a violation 
 of it. The Act in question has already been amended without 
 the aid of the Imperial Parliament. The Act constituted a House 
 of Assembly of fifty members; in process of time parts of the 
 couuii-y became thickly inhabited, v/hich, when the Act first came 
 inio operation, were uninhabited wastes. A Bill, repealing so much 
 of the Act as related to the Assembly and the division of the 
 
 8wer ' Yes.' On this confession he was sentenced to thirty days' imprisonment, 
 and to pay a fine of 20/. The judge remarked that the pruceeding was one of 
 peculiar mildness, fur it was lefl to the defendant himself to say whether he was 
 guilty or not ; from which, if it were not a mere clap-trap, nothing could have been 
 inferred but that the man was punished because be woidU not perjure himself. 
 
8 
 
 rRO(iRES!S OK KVUNTS IN CANADA. 
 
 ^'■■l 
 
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 fil 
 
 •i 
 
 province, and making a new division, and adding to tlie numbtT 
 of members returned, was accordingly passed, first by tho 
 Assembly, next by the Council, subseqijently received the 
 (irovernor's assent, and is now part of the Canadian constitution. 
 No objection was made to this local amendment at the time ; 
 why then should objections now bo made to the principle? 1'ho 
 answer is easy. In the former case the local oligarchy conceived 
 themselves likely to be benefited ; in the more recent case they 
 see prospective ruin. 
 
 With the present Legislative Council the preliminary objection 
 need scarcely have been raised, as they are not very likely to pass 
 a Bill for their own destruction. Without their destruction, how- 
 ever, the pacification of Canada is impossible; and as the King 
 has the prerogative n peer-making, under another name, there 
 as well as hero, the readiest and least troublesome way of render- 
 ing the Council elective would be to furnish the King's represen- 
 tative with a sufficient number of blank mandamuses, to enable 
 him to give a majority in the Council to the views of the Assembly 
 and of the people at largo. Thus might imperial legislation — 
 always an evil where a local legislature exists — be avoided. 
 
 The alteration in the Legislative Council has been objected to 
 on various pretexts, some of which are curious, as exhibiting tho 
 shifts to which the enemies of responsible colonial governments 
 are occasionally driven. One of the Commissioners, in conversa- 
 tion with one of the liberal party, hinted that a strong objection 
 to granting the reform in question was, that the majority demand- 
 ing the change, though overwhelming, was composed chiefly of 
 persons of French origin, whilst the minority opjjosed to the 
 change consisted chiefly of person of British origin. If the 
 population had not been of mixed origin, said the Commissioner, 
 there could be no objection to the proposed change. Well, then, 
 was the reply — try the reform in Upper Canada, where it is prayed 
 for by a large majority, all of British origin. And how, reader, 
 do you think the Commissioner got out of tliis awkward dilemma ? 
 By replying, that although of one origin, the people were not so 
 unanimous as in Lower Canada. Here are hard conditions of 
 reform indeed — uniformity of origin and unanimity of opinion ; 
 the alternative being no other than to give complete effect to the 
 will of a contemptible minority ! 
 
 But if the question of an elective Council were left to the deci- 
 sion of the people of British origin alone, it would be carried in 
 the affirmative by a large majority. The township -counties, 
 inhabited entirely by persons of British origin, for the most part 
 return members favourable to the elective principle; and in one 
 of the counties for which opponents of the principle sit, they 
 only prevailed over their adversaries bv a small majoritv. Esli- 
 
 I 
 
PnOORFJS OF EVENTS IN CANADA. 
 
 ir 
 
 mating the whole population of British descent in Lower Canada 
 at 150,000, the persons represented by members opponed to the 
 wishes of the majority do not exceed 40,000 — a misera^e mino- 
 rity out of a population exceeding 600,000 ; yet it is to the will 
 of this minority that the present system gives effect. 
 
 It is urged that ai. -elective Cfouncil would weaken, and ulti- 
 mately destroy, the connection between the colony and the mother 
 country. We assert, that the maintenance of the present system 
 will not merely ultimately, but even speedily, destroy that con- 
 nection. The Council is the great cav««e of discontent. The chief 
 complaint of the Cajpadians against the Imperial Government is, 
 not that it is itself directly and immediately oppressive, but that 
 it maintains and supports the Legislative Council. And well 
 may this monstrous institution be offensive to the colony. There 
 may be ditlcrences on the question, how much of the government 
 of the colony should belong to the colony itself, and now much 
 to the mother country ? — but most people will allow that all the 
 power ought to belong either to the mother country or to the 
 colony. The colony exercises its powers through its representa- 
 tive body. The mother country exercises its powers through the 
 Governor ; and, by means of Parliament and the Colonial Office, 
 can hold him responsible for whatever he does in the exercise of 
 them. But here is a third power, co-equal with these two, and 
 representing neither the mother country nor the colony, but a 
 band of jobbing officials solely : not only frustrating the wishes 
 of the colony, but superseding the authority of the mother 
 country, since the Bills which embody the demands of the people, 
 being rejected in the Upper House, never come regularly before 
 the Governor or the Colonial Minister at all. 
 
 Mr. Roebuck, in his pamphlet, shows conclusively that an 
 elective Council would tend more than any other measure to pre- 
 vent a rupture between the colony and the mother country. We 
 regret that we have not space to transfer to our columns the 
 vvliole of his close and logical reasoning ; but we cannot resist 
 the temptation of presenting to the reader the concluding para- 
 graph : — 
 
 ' If (says Mr. Roebuck) ' the separation be to take place violently, 
 it will be a matter of no moment, that it is opposed by the present 
 Legislative Council. Rather, indeed, would such opposition aid any 
 measure of separation. The decisions of the Council have no moral 
 force with tlie people, while the House of Assembly completely repre- 
 sents the whole population. The Legislative Council represents no part 
 of them. Whenever the time for violent separation may come, if come 
 it must, the assent of the Council will neither be needed nor looked 
 for. On the other hand, if the Council were elected, and represented 
 either the whole or a portion of the people, then its co-operation would 
 be looked for and would be needed. There is greater difficulty assuredly 
 
10 
 
 PROGRESS OF EVENTS IN CANADA. 
 
 u 
 
 in gaining the assent of two separate bodies to «o dangerous a pro- 
 ceeding — one involving so awful a responsibility as a revolution — than in 
 gaining that of one only. If the second Assembly were composed of 
 older men, or of persons elected for a longer term, the difficulty would 
 be materially increased. In no way could the breach between the 
 mother country and the colonies be hindered by the existing Council, 
 while in many and important ways it might be delayed by an elective 
 one. The true friends, therefore, of English dominion, ought to desire 
 the change now so eagerly demanded by the Canadians themselves.' — 
 Existing Difficulties^ p. 52. 
 
 The last measure of the Assembly — their address to the King 
 and the two Houses of Parliament — was passed by a majority of 
 55 to 7, on the 26th of February of the present year. In it the 
 Assembly dwell upon the expectations which had been raised by 
 the conduct of the Governor, and the disappointment caused by 
 the disclosure of the instructions to the Commissioners : after 
 which, in the most temperate, yet in the firmest language, they 
 reiterate their previous demand for — 
 
 1 St. An elective Coimcil. 
 
 2d. The repeal of the Tonures' Act, and the Act creating the 
 British-American Land Company. 
 
 3d, Complete Parli.^^^ientary control over the wUoie of the 
 lands belonging to the colony. 
 
 4th. Complete control over revenue and expenditure. 
 
 The address also contains an explicit declaration, that the redress 
 of grievances volvl^X precede any permanent appropriation of money. 
 
 The firmness of the House of Assembly has since been put to 
 another test, and they have sustained it most nobly. 
 
 On the 22d of September the Assembly was called together to 
 receive Lord Glcnelg's answer to their address. The answer was 
 only a reiteration of the instructions — thy demands of the Assem- 
 bly being once more refused. Upon this the Assembly addressed 
 the Governor, repeating the determination they came to at t)ie 
 close of the session of 1835-0 : namely, that the redress of 
 grievances must precede a vote of supphes. This address was 
 carried, in committee, by majorities varying from 58 to 6, 
 and 54 to 9 ; the majority also threatening to retire to their 
 homes, and to leave no quorum. The House was dismissed, after 
 a session of about a fortnight. 
 
 We must now turn to the sister province of Upper Canada, in 
 order to show the progress of discontent under Sir Francis Head. 
 
 Sir Francis, like Lord Gosford, began with liberal professions ; 
 but after his first blunder he was not slow to embroil himself with 
 the House of Assembly. One of his first acts had been to call 
 to the Executive Council (a species of privy council, one of tiie 
 duties of which is to advise the Governor) several very popular 
 men. Tiiis heljHjd to confirm the impression whicii his professions 
 
PROGRESS OF EVENTS IN CANADA. 
 
 11 
 
 had generated — namely, that he was appointed to carry into effect 
 those reforms for which the Assembly had prayed. Not long 
 after, however, on the Council's making an attempt to exercise 
 what had always Ijeen deemed the function of that body — namely, 
 to advise the Governor — Sir Francis turned round upon them, 
 and told them, that he being responsible, and not they, he should 
 not for the future consult them. Hereupon the members of the 
 Council resigned in a body. 
 
 If the matter had stopped here there would at least have been 
 no inconsistency in the proceeding. But no sooner had the per- 
 sons who enjoyed tire confidence of the people resigned than the 
 Cjovernor called to his Executive Council a new set of men, nearly 
 all of whotti were of the Ultra lory party, and moreover ex- 
 tremely obnoxious to the pi^O]ile. This at once destroyed all 
 confidence in Sir Francis Head's professions of reform, and loud 
 expressions of dissatisfaction poured in iVom all quarters. The 
 House of Assembly, the Mayor and Corporation, the citizens of 
 Toronto, the Alliance (an extensive reform society), all carried 
 addresses to the (jovinnor, remonstrating in the strongest terms 
 against the course he had piirsned, and declaring their want of 
 confidence in the men he had chosen. In his replies he merely 
 adhered with the most jHTtinacious ohsliuacy to his first point, 
 declaring that an Executive Council, as it had been understood, 
 was no part of the constitution; that he alone was responsible ; 
 and that therefore ho alone would hold the power. If this be 
 really Sir Francis Head's oj)inion, why appoint a Council at all? 
 To appoint a Tory Council was an uncalled-for insult to the 
 people. 
 
 In his answer to the address of the citizens of Toronto, Sir 
 Francis Head commenced by stating, that as he j)resumed several 
 among those who addressed him were of the industrious classes, 
 he should adapt his languag(» to tlieir capacity, and speak in 
 the ]>lainest manner of which ho was capal)le. Now, \uuler any 
 circu)nstances, tjiis would have evinced great want of tact. If it 
 was Sir Francis's o[)inion that other than plain language would 
 have bet'U unsnited to those whom he addressed, he was quite 
 right in adopting ' plain language ;' but to tell them that he 
 shoidd do so was in tlie highest degree injudicious. It turned 
 out, however, that Sir Francis Head's condescension was quite 
 out of place. The ' industrious' citizens treated Sir Francis with 
 a rejoinder, which must have interfered considerably with his self- 
 complacency. They tell him, that being sensible of the import- 
 ance of knowledge, they have, * l)y their own eftbrts and at their 
 own ex})ense, so far successfidly laboured, as to be able to appre- 
 ciate good writing and /air reasoning.' They then, ' lest his 
 Excellency shouhl doubt their sufficient apprehension of ihe mat- 
 
12 
 
 PROGRESS OF EVENTS IN CANADA. 
 
 
 ter/ proceed to expose both Sir Francis's writing and reasoning 
 in the most perfect manner conceivable. They sho'.v that neither 
 in ' good writing' nor • in fair reasoning* wh? the pompous and 
 foolish Governor a match for them. 
 
 From this time forward but little harmony existed between the 
 Governor and the House of Assembly ; and an occurrence which 
 came to light, in the highest degree discreditable to Sir Francis 
 Head, almost put a stop to all con munication between them. 
 The facts are these : — 
 
 In some way or other the Assembly got an intimation that 
 some pffreement had been entered into between the Council and 
 Sir Francis Head, to the effect that, in case of his demise or ab- 
 sence, the government should devolve on a particular member of 
 of the Council in preference to the rest. The House accordingly 
 addressed the Governor to know whether such bond or agreement 
 had been entered into. To this address Sir P^rancis replied — 
 
 • I have entered into no bond or agreement of any sort with my pre- 
 sent Executive Council, and I do not possess, nor does there exist in 
 Council, any document of such a nature between two or more of the said 
 Council.' 
 
 The matter, however, was referred to a committee of the As- 
 sembly ; and before this committee the two executive councillors, 
 supposed to be parties to the paper in question, were examined. 
 They were compelled to state that there was such a paper or 
 agreement (they would not call it a bond, because it was not in 
 legal form) ; and that it was drawn vp by the Governor himself. 
 Hereupon the committee reports : — 
 
 ' The Honoural)le R. B. Sullivan, tlie Presiding Member of the Exe- 
 cutive Council, and the Honourable Captain Baldwin, informed the com- 
 mittee, as will appear by the minutes of their evidence, marked and 
 hereimto appended, that a paper had been signed, whereby Mr. Sullivan 
 declared his intention, in the event of his Excellency's death, not to ad- 
 minister the government, although by the royal instructions in such a 
 case, the administration would devolve cm him us presiding councillor ; 
 but to resign his office, in order to avoid the administration of the go- 
 vernment, a7id thai this paper was not only in existence^ hut was 
 draicn vp hy his Excellency himself, in the Council Chamber, and de- 
 livered to Mr, Allen, the next senior member, in the jtresence of his 
 Excellency and the whole council.' 
 
 Tlie committee then adds, with a dignified delicacy of lan- 
 guage :— 
 
 * The respect which your Committee feel for his Excellency's high 
 office forbids their dwelling upon the mortifying subject of the contra- 
 diction between his Excdleney's answer and those gentleme:i's testi- 
 mony ; and they will only say, that it must of course destroy all con- 
 fidence in future in his Kxcellcncy's ai^sertions.' * * « 
 
 In a despatch io Lord Glenelg, dated '21st A])ril, 1830, Sir 
 
 \i 
 
 i 
 
 m 
 
 I* 
 
PROGRESS OF EVENTS IN CANADA. 
 
 13 
 
 i 
 
 i.. 
 
 Jb*rancis Head attempts to explain the matter, but his explana- 
 tion is a tissue of miserable quibbles. He does not deny the fact, 
 but contends that the dcc'jraent was not * of the nature applied 
 for :' and concludes by saying ' I denied no such thing ; but' — 
 reader, pray thee mark the but — * stated that I entered into no 
 bond or agreement.' What is this but a denial ? 
 
 From this time forward Sir Francis Head's language and con- 
 duct were characteristic rather of a madman than of a person in 
 sane nund. He threw himself completely into the arms of the 
 Toriesj forgot all his previous professions of reform, and indulged 
 in the most oifensive language towards the reformers, whom he 
 designated as revolutionists, rebels, &c. &c. 
 
 The Assembly in the mean time, got through their business 
 with all possible dispatch ; and to mark their sense of Sir Francis 
 Head's conduct, they refused supplies. Hereupon the Governor 
 did in Upper Canada what the Council did in l40wer Canada — he 
 withheld the royal assent from all the Appropriation Bills which 
 had been passed by the two Houses. He afterwards thought 
 proper to attribute to the rejection of the Supply Bill, amounting 
 to only about 7000/., the whole of the distress and inconvenience 
 which arose from the loss of all the money Bills. 
 
 At the end of May the Governor dissolved the House of As- 
 sembly. The new elections took place at the end of June and the 
 beginning of July ; the result was, that a House, consisting of 
 forty or forty-one Tories and twenty Reformers, was substi- 
 tuted for a House containing forty Reformers to twenty Tories. 
 This extraordinary result astonished the whole country. How 
 it was brought about we shall briefly explain. 
 
 In Upper Canada the Executive possesses extraordinary means 
 of corruption. In the first place, the Governor has at his dis- 
 posal an almost infinite number of small places — the tenure of 
 which is * during pleasure ' — all over the country. These innu- 
 merable petty offices not merely enable the Governor to command 
 the votes of the incumbents and their families, but render sub- 
 servient to the will of the Executive all those (including that 
 numerous class, * fathers of families ') who view office with a long- 
 ing eye. !t is fearful to contemplate the extent of demoralization 
 in Upper Canada arising from this single cause. One single office 
 may stand as the bait for a dozen hungry expectants, and were it 
 not for the existence of a numerous and independent yeomanry, it 
 would be difficult to say where the evil would end. 
 
 The next source of political corruption is the system of dis- 
 posing of waste lands, for a price payable by instalments. The 
 Land Company and other large landholders are in the habit of 
 selling lands at a price payable in four or five annual instalments. 
 The industrious settler, ever eager to possess land, no sooner saves 
 
14 
 
 PROGRESS OF EVENTS IN CANADA. 
 
 :'!:.: 
 
 MSj; 
 iiii 
 
 enough money to p»y an instalment than he purchases a lot. In 
 a ma.joritv of cases the purchasers fall behind-hand with the 
 second or third instalment, when their independence is for the pre- 
 sent destroyed. The agjnts of the Land Company are members 
 of the colonial oligarchy, so that we may bo sure they are not 
 slow to profit, for political purposes, by the fears of tliese de» 
 pendent debtors. Any actual exertion of their ultimate power is 
 seldom, perhaps never, necessary. 
 
 Another fruitful source of corruption is the power of the Go- 
 vernor so to regulate the disposal of waste lands as to create votes, 
 by creating small freeholds. This power Sir Francis Head is 
 stated to have employed to an enormous extent, and the statement 
 is supported by an abundance of cvidt nc-o. 
 
 When a settler acquires land ol" ih<> Crown in Canada he re- 
 ceives what is called a location -1 id et. litis empowers him to go 
 upon the lot of land ; but before lie can dbtaiu a good title, it is 
 incumbent upon him to perform what tuv called the settlement- 
 duties, which consist of clearing a certain small portion, and 
 erecting a log-house. The Assembly decided that the possession 
 of a location-ticket did not confer a v<.)to, and s ) it was held till 
 lately. Votes however have, at the present election, been re- 
 corded on this qualification, and as the Assembly is the tribunal of 
 decision, it is not likely a Tory Assembly will decide the point 
 against the Executive. It is stated, and the statement is supported 
 by much evidence, that at least 5000 votes have been created on 
 small, chiefly quarter-acre, lots. Now it is more than ])ro- 
 bable that 1200 or 1500 would have been quite sufficient, aided 
 by other expedients, to turn the elections in Sir Francis Head's 
 favour. 
 
 The former House, as we have stated, had forty Reformers ; 
 the present contains oidy twenty. Each county returns two mem- 
 bers, so that it would oidy be necessary to overwhelm ten cotnities 
 witii"TLiiese new-made voters, and the object would be attained. 
 The average number of voters in each county does not certaitdy 
 reach 1000, and perhaps not 800; hence 150, or even 100 obe- 
 dient Tory votes, added to the constituency of each of ten 
 counties (making 1500, or even 1000 on the whole;, would be 
 adequate to the effect. Now it is currently stated in Upper 
 Canada, that 5000 — a number probably exaggerated — of such 
 votes were made : and yet this is called a re-action ! 
 
 Several minor, but almost equally unjustifiable expedients were 
 resorted to. The polling-places were arbitrarily fixed in parts of 
 the counties likely to be most conv(;nient to the Tory cr.ndidates., 
 The day of election, for places where a Tory retiun was tolerably 
 certain, was fixed several days in advance of the other elections, 
 in order that such returns might depress the Liberals, and encou- 
 
 
PROGRESS OF EVENTS IN CANADA. 
 
 15 
 
 rage and stimulate the 1 ories. In addition to all this, Sir Francis 
 went about the country playing the part of an agitator ; receiving 
 addresses, and answering them in the most highly-wrought and 
 inflammatory language. 
 
 Now the evil which is to b^ dreaded from the results thus 
 
 Generated is, that Ministers will, in their future conduct towards 
 Jpper Canada, act as though there really had been a re-action of 
 opinion in that province. If they do act on such a fallacious 
 assumption, they will commit a grievous and irreparable error. 
 The tone of the people at tlieir public meetings — the extensive 
 organization of reform societies — the constant discussion of the 
 question of national independence — all utterly preclude the idea 
 of re-action. A large majority of the peojAe of Upper Canada 
 sympathize with their Lower Canadian brethren in their desire 
 for a responsible government ; and any neglect or indignity, any 
 denial of justice, or infliction of injustice on the one province, will 
 be resented by both. 
 
 Although the people of Upper Canada are now, through the 
 press and otherwise, freely discussing the means of establishing 
 their independence, neither they nor their brethren of Lower 
 Canada desire independence as an end, but merely as a means, to 
 good government. Give them a responsible government — that is, 
 responsible to themselves — and we shall not hear of independence 
 for many years to come. Deny what they ask, and who will ven- 
 ture to predict the result ? 
 
 Under the supposition of a struggle, the people of both the 
 Canadas have not neglected to examine their means and position. 
 The public lands have been passed in review as an adequate in- 
 ducement to the riflemen of Ohio, Kentucky, and Micliigan, to 
 engage in their ca\ise. They expect no assistance from the 
 American government ; but they feel sure of it from the American 
 people. The great jealousy between the northern and the southern 
 parts of the American Union would also operate favourably to the 
 Canadians. The province of Texas is very likely to become 
 another state of the Union. Siiould that be the case, the non- 
 slave-holding states will desire an addition, to preserve their pre- 
 sent proportion of power. Should the Canadas at that moment 
 step in, and ask admission into the Union, who can doubt what 
 would be the reply ? 
 
 Let \is earnestly hope that the Government will not force upon 
 the Canadians the alternative of misgovernment or independoice. 
 Good government they assuredly will have ; by what means, de- 
 pends wholly on the Ministry and the Parliament. 
 
 H. S. C.